1 / 12

Chapter 6 : Reviewing the Literature

Chapter 6 : Reviewing the Literature. Roles of the literature in research (Fig. 6.1). The entire basis of the research Source of: ideas on topics for research information on research already done by others methodological or theoretical ideas

jamar
Download Presentation

Chapter 6 : Reviewing the Literature

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6: Reviewing the Literature

  2. Roles of the literature in research (Fig. 6.1) • The entire basis of the research • Source of: • ideas on topics for research • information on research already done by others • methodological or theoretical ideas • comparison between your research and that of others • information that is an integral or supportive part of the research – for example statistical data on the study area population A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  3. Sources of information (Fig. 6.2) • Library catalogues • Specialist indexes & electronic databases • The Internet • Google Scholar • Published bibliographies • General sport studies/management books • Reference lists • Beyond sport • Unpublished research A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  4. Compiling and maintaining a bibliography • It is good practice to develop and maintain a personal bibliographic database. • Always record full details. • Use of software, such as Endnote, is worthwhile. • It should only be necessary to type out a reference once in your life! A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  5. Reviewing the literature • Types of review (Fig. 6.3) • Inclusive – everything written on the topic • Inclusive/evaluative – as 1. + your commentary • Exploratory – finding out what is known/ not known – focus on a question/issue • Instrumental – finding convenient, up-to-date source for a theory/framework/summary • Content analysis/hermeneutics – technical, analytical analysis of texts A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  6. Questions to ask when reviewing (Fig. 6.4) • Individual items: • Empirical basis of the research? • Relationships to other writing on the topic? • Theoretical framework being used? • Geographical area covered? • Social group(s) included? • When conducted? Still valid? A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  7. Questions to ask when reviewing contd • The literature as a whole: • Range of research conducted? • Methods generally used? Methods neglected? • What does the research tell us? • What does the research nottell us? • Contradictions in the literature? • Deficiencies - substantive or methodological? A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  8. Summarising/Making sense (Fig. 6.5) Data set B Related issue Data set A Main Topic/Issue Sub-theme X Theory A Sub-theme Y Theory B A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  9. Referencing the literature • Generic reference format (Fig. 6.6) • A book or report: • Author(s), Initials (Year) Title of Book or Report in Italics. Place of publication: Publisher. • NB Publisher is not the same as printer. • An article from a periodical (journal/ magazine/newspaper): • Author(s), Initials (Year) Title of article. Title of Periodical in Italics, Volume number (Issue number), Page numbers. A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  10. Generic reference format (Fig. 5.7) • A book or report: • Author(s), Initials (Year) Title of Book or Report in Italics. Place of publication: Publisher. • NB Publisher is not the same as printer. • An article from a periodical (journal/ magazine/newspaper): • Author(s), Initials (Year) Title of article. Title of Periodical in Italics, Volume number (Issue number), Page numbers. A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  11. Two referencing systems • Author-date or Harvard system • Footnote or endnote system A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

  12. Comparing the two systems A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge

More Related